Just when we thought we had soft-boys figured out, the performative man entered the chat—more evolved, more “emotionally available,” and much harder to detect. With their tote bags, curated vinyl collections, and “vulnerability” posts on Instagram, they look like the kind of partner you’ve been manifesting. But under the aesthetic and the progressive slogans lies something far more dangerous: a man who’s learned how to perform emotional depth without ever embodying it.
Who Is the Performative Man?
The performative man is not just your average pseudo-intellectual. He’s the guy who’s learned how to look deconstructed. He knows the language of feminism, therapy, and spirituality—but it’s all surface. He sends you your birth chart as a flirty DM. He posts reels of his journaling routine, lights Palo Santo, and maybe even recommends a podcast on “emotional availability.”
He’ll casually mention his favorite quote from bell hooks at brunch… but interrupt you constantly during a disagreement. He might tell you he’s “unlearning toxic masculinity,” but somehow still expects you to mother him emotionally. He performs sensitivity, but lives entitlement.
In essence, he’s mastered the art of sounding like he gets it—without ever doing the uncomfortable work of actually getting it.

Woke But Hollow: Aesthetic Over Accountability
Let’s be clear: being emotionally expressive, reading feminist theory, or embracing spirituality is not the problem. The problem is weaponizing those things as personality traits to gain approval, validation, and—let’s be real—romantic or sexual attention.
The performative man thrives on applause. He curates his identity to fit what women want from “a better man,” but only as long as it benefits him. He may wear thrifted sweaters and drink oat milk lattes, but when you need him to show up emotionally or take accountability? That enlightened persona evaporates.
This is where it gets dangerous. Because unlike overtly toxic men, performative men are slippery. They hide behind the illusion of being “better than the rest.” So when you call them out, you may feel like you’re the one being unreasonable.
“He’s so nice though.”
“But he reads bell hooks!”
“At least he’s not like other guys…”
Exactly. That’s the trap.
@luke_liu the performative man: an introduction
Why He’s a Massive Red Flag
The performative man is the emotional equivalent of walking on unstable ground. You never know when the mask will slip, or whether his values are real or rehearsed.
Here’s what makes him particularly dangerous:
- He uses feminism and therapy language to appear safe, but avoids actual self-reflection.
- He seeks validation for “trying” instead of doing.
- He positions himself as “one of the good guys,” making it harder for you to challenge him without feeling guilty.
- He confuses being perceived as good with actually being good.
This creates a power imbalance where you end up doing the emotional heavy lifting—holding space for him, managing your own discomfort, and often gaslighting yourself into thinking you’re asking too much.

The Matcha-Covered Reality
The performative man isn’t necessarily malicious. He’s often unaware that his entire identity is a carefully curated brand. That’s what makes it so exhausting. You might find yourself constantly trying to prove his authenticity to yourself, justifying red flags with aesthetic cues: “But he volunteers… he reads poetry… he says he’s in therapy…”
None of that means anything if it’s not followed by action.
If he says he believes in equity but lets you plan the date, carry the conversation, manage the relationship, and do the emotional work—that’s not deconstruction. That’s strategic incompetence.
The Emotional Toll
Engaging with a performative man isn’t just disappointing—it’s emotionally draining. You’re sold the idea of a partnership rooted in empathy and mutual care, but what you actually get is:
- Confusion (“Why doesn’t his behavior match his words?”)
- Self-doubt (“Am I being too intense?”)
- One-sided labor (“Why am I always the one initiating the hard conversations?”)
- Emotional burnout (“Why does trying to be heard feel so exhausting?”)
Over time, you start minimizing your own needs because he’s “not that bad.” And that’s exactly how the cycle continues.
So, What Can You Do?
If you start to suspect you’re dating—or are being love-bombed by—a performative man, here are a few gentle reminders:
- Believe patterns, not promises.
- Watch how he behaves when it’s inconvenient.
- Challenge inconsistencies—and trust your gut when he gets defensive.
- You’re not being picky. You’re being clear.
True emotional maturity doesn’t live in his bookshelf or his skincare routine—it shows up in how he treats you when it’s hard.
The performative man looks like progress, but underneath, he often replicates the same old dynamics—just with better lighting and prettier captions. It’s okay to want a partner who’s emotionally intelligent, sensitive, and self-aware. But it’s also okay to expect depth, not just performance.
